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UN chief Ban Ki Moon knew Tamil civilian toll had reached 20,000

May 29th, 2009 Posted in Uncategorized

The top aide to the United Nations Secretary-General was told more than a week ago that at least 20,000 Tamil civilians were killed in the Sri Lankan Government’s final offensive against the Tamil Tiger rebels this month, The Times can reveal.

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UN officials told Vijar Nambiar, Ban Ki Moon’s chief of staff, that their figures indicated a likely final death toll of more than 20,000, during a briefing in preparation for Mr Ban’s visit to the region on May 23.

Two staff present at the meeting confirmed the exchange to The Times but Mr Ban never mentioned the death toll during his tour of the battleground, which he described as the “most appalling scene” he had witnessed in his long international career.

The casualty figure, revealed by The Times yesterday, triggered an international furore, with the Sri Lankan authorities denying the report and human rights groups demanding an investigation into possible war crimes.

See Srilanka Tamil Civilians Slaughtered by Srilanka Govenment Forces

Lakshman Hulugalle, a Defence Ministry spokesman, said: “These figures are way out . . . What we think is that these images are also fake. We totally deny the allegation that 20,000 people were killed.”

But, internationally, calls have been growing for an independent war crimes investigations on both sides and for access by humanitarian groups to the war zone and the 270,000 Tamil civilians who are still being detained.

Amnesty International called on the UN to release the estimated figures to help to push for a war crimes inquiry. “The Timess investigation underscores the need for investigation and the UN should do everything it can to determine the truth about the ‘bloodbath’ that occurred in northeast Sri Lanka,” Sam Zarifi, the Asia-Pacific director of Amnesty International, said.

“The Human Rights Council’s decision not to call for specific measures to protect Sri Lankans made a mockery of the council, but it does not mean the end of the international community’s responsibility to respond to this continuing crisis,” Mr Zarifi said.

The International Committee of the Red Cross made a rare public plea yesterday for access to the no-fire zone and internment camps in the region. “We haven’t been able to access the areas where most of these people would have fled from since the ending of the most recent fighting,” Florian Westphal, the Red Cross spokesman, told a briefing in Geneva.

The figure of 20,000 casualties was given to The Times by UN sources, who explained in detail how they arrived at that calculation.

Before this month’s bombardment made the recording of each individual death impossible, the figures had been collated from deaths reported by priests and doctors and added to a count of the bodies brought to medical points.

Of the total, the bodies collected accounted for only a fifth of all reported deaths. After the bombing intensified this month, the only numbers available were by a count of the bodies. The 20,000 figure is an extrapolation based on the actual body count.

The 20,000 figure has also been obtained by Le Monde, the French daily newspaper, which quoted UN sources as saying that the figure had not been made public to avoid a diplomatic storm. The figure of 7,000 deaths until the end of April, which was based on individually documented deaths and not estimates, was leaked by UN sources in Sri Lanka this month after internal anger over the secrecy surrounding them. UN satellite images documenting the bombing of medical facilities were also leaked from New York.

The UN Humanitarian Co-ordination Office said yesterday that the figures cited by The Times were based on “well-informed estimates” given in private briefings to member states to underscore its concern — including Britain and the United States.

“You have seen the figures that are mentioned. Obviously, what we have are well-informed estimates and not precise, verifiable numbers,” said Elisabeth Byrs, spokeswoman for the humanitarian co-ordination office. “The point is the UN has not been shy about the scale of human suffering and civilian casualties. It has been ringing the alarm bells for a long time.”

Source: Britain Times Magazine

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8 Responses to “UN chief Ban Ki Moon knew Tamil civilian toll had reached 20,000”

  1. 8
    Human:

    As expected even when these fools at the Srilankan military conduct a staged tour of the conflict zone, they can’t hide the truth. It is clearly evident from the various reports that these military spokesmen are trying to hide the actual deaths and destruction caused by their shelling and bombing. I found it laughable when one of the military thugs says that they were blowing a mine when in fact they were firing a shell into the so-called ‘no fire’ zone. Such is the impunity with which these thugs operate. If they could do this in front of independent media, you can imagine the savagery the last three months on mayhem has caused to these innocent Tamil civilians.
    I really think that this figure of 6500 killings reported by the UN is underestimated. Remember this government was saying there were only 65,000 to 70,000 people in the safe zone a few weeks ago. Now it claims 110,000 have ‘escaped’ into their territory with another 20,000 still holed up. So you can clearly see how they under-report the figures. This was done clearly to exterminate thousands of people in what can only be described as a genocide. By all independent accounts, there are still about 160,000 people in the so-called safe zone. So l guess Rajapaksa plans to slaughter about 140,000 people in the same of ‘hostage rescue operation’?
    Another method employed by this genocidal government is to deprive food and medicine to the trapped people. If these aren’t enough proof of ethnic cleansing, I don’t know what is. It is well past time forthe international community to act to prevent worsening of this on-going genocide.

  2. 7
    PS:

    why do we need UN if they cant stop such attrocities?

  3. 6
    PS:

    no words to describe… this is government sponsered terrorisim.. agree?

  4. 5
    Maya:

    True but 7000 were killed in april when the defender was alive.

    Many many were being killed since 40yrs when all those times the defender was alive.

    I dont know what to say…its just so depressing

  5. 4
    To Pravee:

    But Pravee

    Lakhs of people were still killed when the defender was alive.

  6. 3
    Pravee:

    Maya,

    You might want to think why dint these people die earlier.

    Clue: they had somebody defending on their side!

  7. 2
    Mm:

    Sad news…..

  8. 1
    Maya:

    Ayyo kodumapa…… LTTE aa olichukatiyachu war inime illa..adhu idhunu sonnanunga…inum yean kolranunga dog pasanga…….

    andha azhagana island….3/4th alinje pochu…inum vida maatikuranga erumainga….

    idhukellam epodhan mudivu varapogudho….inimelaachum uyir pogadhunu nenachen..ana inum poikute dhan iruku….romba kashtama irukupa……… ivununga ella countriesyum avamanapaduthi anupuraanunga….ella countryum serndhu aapu vecha therium…..ana adhu ellam indha jenmathula nadakura maadhiri therila…

    cha…ipolam news padikamale irukalamnu thonudhu…..

    Ulagathula iruka ella kadavulayum ketukarom….indha kodumayai seekiram niruthirunga…. yaaralyum thaangika mudila….. doesnt matter who we are and where we come from…ellarum manushanga dhan…ellarum serndhu ketkurom…indha kodumayai adiyoda niruthunga

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